Museum Restoration

Arizona State University has exonerated ASU Art Museum Director Marilyn Zeitlin of wrongdoing in connection with allegations of misuse of university funds. Last week, ASU released findings of a four-month internal investigation into the allegations, which had surfaced in a state auditor general’s report last March. The conclusion: More than…

Flashes

Microsoft’s Man McCain The Flash is frothing at the mouth, anticipating the next Federal Election Commission campaign filings, due out later this month. Just whom has Campaign Finance Reform Poster Boy John McCain (our senior senator, no less) been sucking up to, lo these past tobacco-money-free months? Don’t cry for…

The Dark Side of the Rainbow

In Arizona, stealing someone’s water is a crime second only to horse thievery. But the people attending the Rainbow Gathering in the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest are illegally diverting hundreds of thousands of gallons of the privately owned resource. Property owners and federal officials have opted not to get into a…

Letters

The Joke’s on John The first thing Senator John McCain did following the telling of a completely derogatory and vile “joke” at the expense of Chelsea Clinton was to write a letter of apology (Flashes, June 18). If he ever says that about either of my daughters, the first thing…

Cops Kid Around

The press packet makes it sound exciting. Fight Crime: Invest in Kids, it says. That’s the name of the Washington, D.C.-based organization that’s in Phoenix to discuss initiatives aimed at preventing kids from becoming criminals. “Arizona could cut crime–perhaps by half or more–by cutting the enemy’s most important supply line:…

Special Kay

Dr. Kay Rauth-Farley is checking on a toddler named Alex in the pediatric ward of St. Joseph’s Hospital. The 1-year-old has a fractured skull, and he’s whimpering in his bed. “Oh, baby,” she says soothingly. The pediatrician feels for the large mushy spot on top of the baby’s head. Alex…

Spaced Out in Tempe

The Tempe Arts Center (TAC) has always existed precariously. It was conceived by a well-meaning city committee in 1981 to be an independent, nonprofit spot of culture on then-run-down Mill Avenue. It grew into an ad hoc arts center that mounts a wide range of exhibits and sends artists into…

Flashes

McCain Mutiny? Oops! The first note of disenchantment with Arizona’s mouthy, self-aggrandizing Senator John McCain has been uttered by one of the media mavens who had crowned him their political Golden Boy. In Sunday’s New York Times, op-ed columnist Maureen Dowd unleashed a prickly fusillade at McCain for his tasteless…

Detourist Trap

John Wilson can’t go straight home in the morning. The city of Phoenix won’t let him. He lives just blocks from where 32nd Street and Shea Boulevard dump all of north Phoenix, north Scottsdale and Paradise Valley’s rush-hour traffic into the north end of the Squaw Peak Parkway. Three years…

Staff Infection

Several top staffers have left Arizona’s troubled Board of Medical Examiners (BOMEX). The agency, which has struggled for several years with a huge backlog of complaints against doctors, last week lost its chief lawyer and deputy director, departures apparently prompted by the arrival of a new executive director. Assistant Attorney…

Letters

Senator of Controversy Regarding the recent public outcry against Senator John McCain’s lack of character, he deserved it. Not only has he committed a despicable attack on an innocent young girl (Flashes, June 18), but when McCain should speak up about vital issues in our community, he remains silent. I…

Boy Meets Grill

In 1953, eating out was simpler than it is today. Remember the icy sweetness of a tall Root Beer Float or a super thick chocolate shake on a lazy summer day? Remember the juicy goodness of a grilled patty melt sittin’ next to a big mound of fries . …

Preach of trust

People wearing latex gloves sit on the floor of a west Phoenix living room, pulling artifacts from the life of Roger Somers Rudin out of large garbage bags and stacking them in leaning piles. Court documents. Photographs. Church records. Financial ledgers. Religious tracts. Articles of clothing. Nearly all of it…

Skid Row

Cindy Stewart was killed in a car wreck on state Highway 89 near Prescott on a hot and rainy August day in 1994. Never mind that she was the mother of four, including 7-year-old twins, on her way to pick up a 14-year-old daughter from band camp at Mingus Mountain…

Flashes

That’s Senator McNasty to You Arizonans have long known that John McCain fancies himself a comedian. In fact, the Snowy-Haired Senator bears an uncanny resemblance in demeanor and delivery to Slappy White. We won’t soon forget that during his first run for Congress in the Eighties, Humble John referred to…

My Eddie Bauer Ford Explorer, the Car

Joe Arpaio likes to call himself the Country’s Toughest Sheriff. Now Rick Romley’s angling for the title “Sportiest County Attorney.” For the past few weeks, Romley’s been cruising around town in a spiffy brand-new white Ford Explorer–the deluxe Eddie Bauer edition, no less–courtesy of the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office. Quite…

Down the Drain

Maricopa County Superior Court judge’s dismissal of claims that an industrial solvent can cause cancer and other health problems could have a chilling effect on toxic-liability suits across the country. Judge Steven Sheldon’s recent decision to reject contentions by 18 Scottsdale residents as lacking scientific foundation has caught the attention…

Talking the Walk

Father Ken Van De Veen is one pissed-off man of the cloth. Van De Veen is one of a number of people in Phoenix’s HIV/AIDS community who’s questioning the administration of last year’s AIDS Walk Arizona–a giant fund raiser organized by AIDS Project Arizona (APAZ). The AIDS Walk is a…

Oscar Performance

Where do racist white gangs allow black people to be members? In Arizona, according to a news release by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. At least that’s what the Reverend Oscar Tillman, president of the Arizona NAACP, was saying at the news conference he called last…

Letters

Rights Busters “Suspects of Convenience” by Paul Rubin (May 28) is an excellent example of the methods that the federal and local governments are using to subvert the Constitution in the name of “The War on Drugs.” Here you have store clerks and owners arrested because they sold legal over-the-counter…

Advocate Without Pier

Jeff Ofstedahl is sipping a tall glass of beer at Wink’s, and for the third time in as many minutes, someone comes up to ask him the same question. “What are you still doing here?” Each time, it’s asked with the same tone: a mixture of surprise and admiration. Everyone…

Arizona and the Siege of the Rangers

The dawn of a new campaign. It’s 7:25 a.m., Tuesday, March 3, at the foot of the steps to Old Main, the University of Arizona’s trademark edifice in Tucson. Ed Ranger has traveled to the bottom of the state to announce his candidacy for the top spot on Arizona’s political…